Athletics-Teen sensation Gout misses sub‑10 mark at Australia's junior championships


Athletics - Australian Athletics Junior Championship - Brisbane, Australia - April 18, 2026 Gout Gout celebrates winning the under 20s 100m final Jono Searle/AAP Image via REUTERS

April 18 (Reuters) - Teenage sprinter Gout Gout ⁠waved to the home crowd as he powered to victory in the men's under-20 ⁠100 metres, clocking 10.21 seconds at the Australian junior championships in Brisbane on ‌Saturday but failing to break the elusive sub-10 barrier.

The 18-year-old recovered from a sluggish start that left him second at halfway before surging clear to win with a legal +0.5 metres-per-second tailwind, finishing ahead of Zavier Peacock (10.35) and Uwezo Lubenda (10.37).

Gout, ​who ran 10.19 in the heats and qualified for the ⁠final with 10.44 in the semi-final, ⁠claimed his second consecutive national under-20 100m title despite missing his goal of dipping below 10 ⁠seconds.

"My ‌family is here somewhere so I was waving to them, my friends and a couple of the fans," Gout said after the win.

"I didn't have the best start. I ⁠couldn't tell you why. The coach could probably tell you. I ​came out for the 'w' (win) ‌pretty much and put on a show for the people watching."

The win came less ⁠than a week after ​Gout delivered a landmark performance at the Australian Athletics Championships, where he ran 19.67 seconds in the 200 metres to become the first man from his country to break the 20-second barrier.

That race was his ⁠first official sub-20, following a wind-assisted 19.84 last season ​at the national championships.

Gout ran a personal best in the 100 metres of 10.00 seconds in February and previously clocked 9.99 seconds in Perth, though that effort was aided by excessive wind.

"I have done ⁠10.00 flat in my season opener and that race was a bit rocky. Time will tell obviously but I am pretty sure that is coming soon," Gout said about breaking the 10-second barrier.

"Obviously I didn't do it here, but soon for sure. I don't feel pressure too much ​but pressure comes with the territory. The more people, the more ⁠pressure there is. The more pressure, the faster you run.

"Putting on a show is great. I love ​putting on a show."

His performance on Saturday was well outside ‌Patrick Johnson's Australian national record of 9.93, set ​in Japan in 2003, and the 9.96 recorded twice by Lachlan Kennedy at the senior championships earlier this month.

(Reporting by Suramya Kaushik in Bengaluru; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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